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Average Review: Sales Rank: 151
Actors: Tim Ivey, Gena Rowlands, Starletta DuPois, James Garner, Anthony-Michael Q. Thomas Director: Nick Cassavetes Rating: Features: AC-3, Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, DVD-Video, Full Screen, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC Number of Discs: 1 Running Time: 124 minutes Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1 Release Date: February 8, 2005 Theatrical Release Date: June 25, 2004 Studio: New Line Home Video
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DESCRIPTION
A boy from the wrong side of the tracks falls in love with a rich girl, and it seems no one approves of the relationship. Genre: Feature Film-Drama Rating: PG13 Release Date: 3-JAN-2006 Media Type: DVD
When you consider that old-fashioned tearjerkers are an endangered species in Hollywood, a movie like The Notebook can be embraced without apology. Yes, it's syrupy sweet and clogged with clichés, and one can only marvel at the irony of Nick Cassavetes directing a weeper that his late father John--whose own films were devoid of saccharine sentiment--would have sneered at. Still, this touchingly impassioned and great-looking adaptation of the popular Nicholas Sparks novel has much to recommend, including appealing young costars Ryan Gosling and Rachel McAdams and appealing old costars James Garner and Gena Rowlands, the director's mother playing the same loving couple in respectively early 1940s and present-day North Carolina. He was poor, she was rich, and you can guess the rest; decades later, he's unabashedly devoted, and she's drifting into the memory-loss of senile dementia. How their love endured is the story preserved in the titular notebook that he reads to her in their twilight years. The movie's open to ridicule, but as a delicate tearjerker it works just fine. Message in a Bottle and A Walk to Remember were also based on Sparks novels, suggesting a triple-feature that hopeless romantics will cherish. --Jeff Shannon